No life (a.k.a. DattoMaster) 
Joined: 2008/10/10 22:02
From Melbourne Australia (and likely under the car)
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very very generally the cam specs will still apply - i.e. the approximate rpm ranges will be similar (or at least somewhat so). Typically, for a given cam and an engine this size, you'll probably find it extends the useful 'ceiling' of the powerband up about 500-1000rpm higher than the same cam in an engine configured for NA with similar duration/lift.
You generally want to run wider lobe separation to achieve less overlap for the same amount of duration. There are issues as discussed above, but one thing to also consider is that most diy turbo setups, anything which doesn't have equal length exhaust pipes feeding into the turbo (and which aren't the optimal i.d. and length for that matter, they could otherwise be all 'equally' wrong!) - anything without that and you'll typically see (once into decent boost levels) a much higher exhaust backpressure than boost pressure - anyhoo, the more specialised the exhaust to the turbo, the closer lobe separation you can run (relatively) for optimal results. If on the other hand you are running a modded factory cast iron single outlet, then the likely backpressure issue will potentially lead to exhaust being pushed back in, or perhaps more accurately those gases never fully make their way out, and the next compression cycle doesn't have the maximum amount of fresh air/fuel in there as some of the space is taken up by exhaust gases that didn't clear.
Hence the typical (and sensible) advice that if you are starting from scratch, and the exhaust isn't something that has seen a lot of dyno development (and educated guesses with enough experience will also close in on that ideal sizing anyway) or whatever - well in those circumstances, if you are getting a cam ground from scratch, you'd tend to look at about 2-4 degrees wider lobe separation than the same cam for the same engine/size type in NA form. A lot of engines have their own idiosynchrasies (I mean engines of the same family, not each and every a-15!) so precisely what that lobe separation ends up being varies from engine to engine. You'd probably be looking at around 110-112 tops for an a-series, but some dino V8 pushrod engines like a few degrees wider than that. Having said all that, if you already have the cam, I would suggest that whilst there would be some potential to be found with a different grind, it's a tough call to say that it'd be enough of a gain to warrant the time and expense of swapping it out there.
As to the power potential - that's a tough one. It'd heavily depend on what the static compression ratio is (I would assume it's high-ish to suit the fact it was put together with a moderately bigger than factory cam and the fact it was put together as a non turbo build from the start). So that is a big factor. THe other one is which fuel you intend to use. If it is e85, you wouldn't struggle to top 200bhp, as long as you get the fuelling and ignition timing right. On 'regular' pump fuel, it's still a tough call, because you could look at water injection, and or intercooling.
Posted on: 2013/12/26 5:20
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